Appellee was charged in the conrt below with murder in the first degree. A trial resulted in a verdict of murder in the second degree. Appellee filed a motion for a new trial, and his motion was sustained. The court then, over the objection and exception of the State, permitted appellee to enter a plea of guilty to the involved offense of manslaughter, and rendered judgment on the plea.
The State appeals under §§1915, 1955 Burns 1901, §§1846, 1882 E. S. 1881. Appellee, however, has interposed a motion to dismiss the appeal, and this motion presents the threshold question in the case.
As before pointed out, the effect of the action of the court in receiving a plea of guilty to the charge of manslaughter, and proceeding to judgment on the plea, operated to acquit appellee of the substantive offense charged in the indictment, as well as of murder in the second degree, and as this result was brought about by an act of sheer power on the part of the court, which involved a setting aside without trial of the charges of murder embraced in the indictment, it is evident that the spirit, if not the letter, of §1742, supra, was violated. We hold that the exception of the State was well taken.
In Moon v. State (1852), 3 Ind. 438, this court said: “An indictment for murder in the first degree is really an' indictment for one of three distinct crimes, viz., murder in
Appeal sustained on the ground first above stated.